This page contains too many unsourced statements and needs to be improved.

World War III could use some help. Please research the article's assertions. Whatever is credible should be sourced, and what is not should be removed.

World War III (or similar) denotes another hypothetical world war, typically imagined as a way more devastating one than any war ever fought previously. The numbering naturally follows from World War II, though any WW3 clearly hasn't happened just yet. The idea crops up in a number of books - for example: General John Hackett's The Third World War: August 1985 (1978), or Richard Nixon's The Real War (1980) - mostly written during the Cold War period.

Contents

The common theme in speculation about a Third World War often involved "the West" fighting the Soviet Union, with the Soviets often having the upper hand (taking their presentation of military capacity at face value). In post-Cold War examples, which evoke a "Clash of Civilizations" approach, the Western world is often threatened by Islamic terrorism or by China or perhaps India as the emerging superpowers of the early twenty-first century.

Despite the collapse of the Soviet Union, none of the authors of predictive WWIII books issued a retraction/an explanation of why their predictions were wrong.

Nuclear weaponry is often most associated with the concept of WWIII. This has led to a lot of post-apocalyptic science fiction. The sheer scale of a nuclear world war has led numerous authors (as well as Albert Einstein) to quip that the fourth world war would be fought with sticks and stones, in reference to the devastation WWIII would bring about.

There are some schools of thought that say that World War III isn't hypothetical but is very, very real. Some speculate that the Cold War was in fact WWIII, while others describe the War on Terror as WWIII - as both are essentially global, although feature less attrition than the previous two world wars. In cases where people think both count, that makes the War on Terror actually World War IV. Defining what would constitute a "World War" is actually difficult, as the term was only in use from the Second World War onwards - the "First" World War was often referred to even as late as the 1930s as "The European War" or "The Great War," a phrasing that can still be found on many war memorials. The Napoleonic Wars that preceded both could also be included as "world" wars given their scale and duration.